Chicago Sun-Times

THE WHOLE WORLD SHOULD BE WATCHING

One of year’s best films dramatizes 1970 trial of Black activists in Britain accused of inciting riot

- RICHARD ROEPER rroeper@ suntimes. com | @ RichardERo­eper

Earlier this year Aaron Sorkin gave us “The Trial of the Chicago 7,” a brilliant fictionali­zation of the story of the anti- Vietnam War activists who were put on trial for inciting a riot at the 1968 Democratic Convention — a trial that often took on a circus atmosphere. It’s one of the very best movies of 2020.

Now the gifted storytelle­r Steve McQueen (“12 Years a Slave,” “Widows”) delivers an equally compelling dramatizat­ion of a historic moment familiar to far fewer Americans: “Small Axe:

Mangrove,” which dramatizes the tale of the Mangrove Nine, a group of Black activists in the Notting Hill neighborho­od of West London who were put on trial in 1970 on charges of inciting a riot — a trial that often took on a circus atmosphere.

This, too, is one of the very best movies of 2020.

“Mangrove” is the first of five “Small Axe” films from McQueen set in London’s West Indian community from the late 1960s to the mid- 1980s. ( The title comes from the African proverb that says, “If you are the big tree, we are the small axe.”) With “Try Me” by Bob Marley & the Wailers setting the tone for this docudrama- style period piece, we’re introduced to Shaun Parkes’ Trinidad- born Frank Critchlow, who has recently opened a Caribbean restaurant called the Mangrove in Notting

Hill — a place that becomes a focal point for West Indians to gather together to eat, drink, dance, listen to live music and share a sense of community.

The racist Police Constable Frank Pulley ( Sam Spruell, suitably loathsome) is having none of this. Pulley calls law- abiding protesting Blacks “thugs” and says they “should be put down.” He conducts brutal raids on the Mangrove with no cause, and when a new officer joins Pulley’s squad, the rookie is pushed into an “initiation” in which a random Black individual is chased down, beaten and held in jail. ( Pulley is as memorably despicable as corrupt movie cops such as James Cromwell’s Capt. Dudley Smith in “L. A. Confidenti­al” and Ed Harris’ Detective Sgt. Remy Bressant in “Gone Baby Gone.”)

Malachi Kirby is a standout as the activist and writer Darcus Howe, who hosts meetings at the Mangrove, as is Letitia Wright (“Black Panther”) in a powerful and passionate performanc­e as Altheia Jones- Lecointe, a real- life leader of the British Black Panther movement. After an anti- police discrimina­tion rally goes sideways and clashes ensue, nine protesters are arrested and put on trial for crimes that could result in sentences of a decade or longer. McQueen stages the often intense and heated courtroom scenes with pitch- perfect camera angles and cuts that put us right there in the middle of the proceeding­s, as various defendants become not “victims, but protagonis­ts of our own story,” as Altheia JonesLecoi­nte puts it.

With infectious tunes such as “54- 46” by Toots and the Maytals and “Skinhead Moonstomp” by Symarip powering the soundtrack, costumes and production design perfectly capturing the era and a bounty of powerhouse performanc­es from the ensemble cast, “Mangrove” is an invaluable work enlighteni­ng us on an important chapter in Black history across the pond.

The “Small Axe” series will continue with “Lovers Rock” on Nov. 27, “Red, White and Blue” on Dec. 4, “Alex Wheatle” on Dec. 11 and “Education” on Dec. 18.

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 ?? AMAZON PRIME VIDEO ?? Black Panthers leader Altheia Jones- Lecointe ( Letitia Wright) leads a rally in
“Small Axe: Mangrove.”
AMAZON PRIME VIDEO Black Panthers leader Altheia Jones- Lecointe ( Letitia Wright) leads a rally in “Small Axe: Mangrove.”

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